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1 Food, Nutrition and Health, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada; 2 Human Nutrition Research Centre and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, 63122 Ceyrat; and 3 Human Nutrition Research Centre and Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unit 484, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France
The influence of cancer cachexia
and chemotherapy and subsequent recovery of skeletal muscle protein
mass and turnover was investigated in mice. Cancer cachexia was induced
using colon 26 adenocarcinoma, which is characteristic of the human
condition, and can be cured with 100% efficacy using an experimental
nitrosourea, cystemustine
(C6H12CIN3O4S). Reduced
food intake was not a factor in these studies. Three days after
cachexia began, healthy and tumor-bearing mice were given a single
intraperitoneal injection of cystemustine (20 mg/kg). Skeletal muscle
mass in tumor-bearing mice was 41% lower (P < 0.05)
than in healthy mice 2 wk after cachexia began. Skeletal muscle wasting
was mediated initially by decreased protein synthesis (
38%;
P < 0.05) and increased degradation (+131%;
P < 0.05); later wasting resulted solely from decreased synthesis (~
54 to
69%; P < 0.05).
Acute cytotoxicity of chemotherapy did not appear to have an important
effect on skeletal muscle protein metabolism in either healthy or
tumor-bearing mice. Recovery began 2 days after treatment; skeletal
muscle mass was only 11% lower than in healthy mice 11 days after
chemotherapy. Recovery of skeletal muscle mass was affected initially
by decreased protein degradation (
80%; P < 0.05)
and later by increased protein synthesis (+46 to +73%;
P < 0.05) in cured compared with healthy mice. This
study showed that skeletal muscle wasted from cancer cachexia and after
chemotherapeutic treatment is able to generate a strong anabolic
response by making powerful changes to protein synthesis and degradation.
cystemustine; colon 26 adenocarcinoma; cancer; tumor; wasting
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